$2.3M land deal sealed for new Parrish High School

The School Board of Manatee County has closed on a $2.3 million parcel of land for a new high school in the north side of the county in mid-December, according to the latest Manatee County property transfer report, which was released Wednesday.The newly purchased 48-acre parcel had been used as a commercial greenhouse operation near the intersection of Martha and Eerie roads in Parrish. The board purchased the acreage from Aris Horticulture Inc., an Ohio-based floral growing and research company. The land is adjacent to another 48-acre parcel the district purchased in 2005 with plans to build either an elementary or middle school on the property.

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Massive solar power plant to produce energy by December

BY JAMES A. JONES JR.

PARRISH – Workers at Florida Power and Light’s Manatee Solar Energy Center celebrated the installation of 75 percent of its 338,000 solar panels Thursday. Workers were honored for hitting the milestone without safety issues, and celebrated with free pizza and ice cream for lunch. “Little things go a long way,” said Johnny Lynch, senior project manager.

Ground was broken in February on the huge project covering 762 acres — more than 570 football fields. Parrish is expected to start producing 74.5 megawatts of energy in December. The Parrish power plant is one of three that FPL launched at the same time. The others are near Arcadia in DeSoto County and at Babcock Ranch in Charlotte County. Building the three new plants is a workforce of about 250. The new plants together will triple FPL’s solar capacity and help move Florida into sixth place among the 50 states. The solar panels are being installed atop 41,000 piles, or columns, driven 8 to 10 feet into the ground, and are designed to withstand hurricane force winds, Lynch said. The panels will produce direct current, which will be converted to alternating current through inverters, and then be stepped up through a transformer at a substation before feeding into the Parrish power plant. With zero emissions, the clean solar project has generated more enthusiasm from workers and the community than any other project he has been involved with in 20 years, Lynch said. “People are excited about it,” he said.